RELATIVE CLAUSES.

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Presentation transcript:

RELATIVE CLAUSES

Complete with the correct relative pronoun or adverb Complete with the correct relative pronoun or adverb. Use WHO, WHICH, WHOSE, WHEN, WHERE, WHY and THAT. 1. The cup ___________ I bought is broken. 2. Laura is talking to the man ________ repaired her car. 3. A tennis court is a place ___________ we play tennis. 4. He had a fight with his best friend´that’s __________ he’s sad. 5. The day __________ I moved in, they invited me for tea. 6. That’s Simon, ___________ father is a lawyer.

RELATIVE CLAUSES We use relative clauses to add information that defines or describes people and things. The clause goes immediately after the noun it describes. They work as LONG adjectives. “This is the man who sold me the car.” There are two types of relative clauses: a) Defining: The car which I want to buy costs €20,000. b) Non-Defining: My PE teacher, who was an Olympic champion, says exercise is good for you.

RELATIVE PRONOUNS / ADVERBS We use relative pronouns: who, that – for people which, that – for objects where – for places whose – to talk about possession when, that – for a time why, that – for a reason

DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES Defining Relative Clauses are used to identify exactly which person or thong we mean. The information is necessary for the sentence to make sense. Eg. The doctor who treated me told me not to worry. We only know which doctor we are talking about by the relative clause.

EXAMPLES He is the man who / that owns this car. This is the house where I was born. The girl whose party I went to phoned me.

We can leave out who, which, that, whose, when the clause is the object of a sentence. “The doctor I spoke to told me not to worry.” “The man I saw was very rude.” “Mr Smith is the teacher my son likes best.”

We can’t leave out the relative pronoun in a defining relative clause that refers to the subject. “The doctor who treated me told me not to worry.” “That’s the dog that attacked my children”

In defining relative clauses why and when, but where is rarely omitted. I'd like to know the reason (why) he decided not to come BUT! She always had wanted to go to a place where she could speak her native tongue

NON-DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSE We use non-defining relative clauses to add non-essential extra information to a sentence. The clause goes immediately after the noun it describes. If we removed the relative clause, the sentence would still make sense on its own. “Pedro, who is my brother, lives in Astillero.”

We use commas to separate a non-defining clause from the rest of the sentence. Eg: Pablo Picasso, who died in 1973, was a painter and sculptor.

We use relative pronouns: who – for people which – for things where – for places when – for time whose – for possession “Santander, where I live, is a beautiful city.” “My father, who is sixty four, is going to retire soon.”

“John, who is English, helped me write the essay.” We can’t leave out the relative pronoun in non-defining relative clauses. “John, who is English, helped me write the essay.” We can’t use that in non-defining relative clauses.

Complete the sentences with a suitable relative pronoun if necessary. Is that the book _________ you read last month? Is this the film _________ won three Oscars? This is the shop ________ they sell Mexican food. Last summer I met a girl _________ father is a famous lawyer. An engineer is a person ________ plans, makes or repairs things like machines, roads or bridges. My neighbour works for a company _______ builds roads. This is the town _________ my mother grew up.

Complete the sentences with a suitable relative pronoun if necessary. A tin opener is a thing ____ you open things with. Palencia is the city _______ my mother was born. This the company ________ my brother works for. The stage on ________ the new play was performed was very small. I didn’t enjoy the film ________ we saw last night. The sofa on _______ we were sitting collapsed. An air hostess is woman ________ job is to look after people on a plane. Here is the book _____ you have been looking for.